LOS ANGELES — Gennady Golovkin won't really get to see his son grow up this year. He's spending most of his life in a high-altitude gym in California, a continent away from 4-year-old Vadim in Stuttgart, Germany.
The WBA middleweight champion aims to fight five times in 2013, which turns his life into a cycle of monotonous training punctuated by electric ring performances. His slight breaks from the grind are measured in days, not months — and it's hardly enough time for a personal life, let alone parenthood.
"The only negative is he doesn't see his son as much as he would like," said Golovkin's trainer, Abel Sanchez. "We're trying to work something out so he can see him more, but it's tough. He knows what he's trying to accomplish, and it takes sacrifice."
Golovkin (26-0, 23 KOs) thinks his heavy schedule will be worth all the work if he keeps moving forward in his quest to join the world's best pound-for-pound fighters — and at 31, he knows every passing month is precious to his goal.
"I want to fight the best, and I want to fight all the time," Golovkin said. "This is my dream, so I have to keep going."
Golovkin takes the biggest step yet in his march on Saturday when he faces Matthew Macklin (29-4, 20 KOs), a respected veteran middleweight, at the Foxwoods Resort Casino in eastern Connecticut. Although Golovkin has a title belt and the respect of most boxing insiders, he's still a nightmare matchup for the few fighters considered his peers from 154 to 168 pounds, due to his combination of formidable talent and little mainstream name recognition.
Although Golovkin can't get the world's best opponents yet, he insists he'll keep working until they can't ignore him.
"A lot of people who become successful lose the meaning of being a world champion," said Golovkin's promoter, Tom Loeffler. "He's willing to fight anybody, and we want to keep him busy, keep him in front of the fans. That's really the goal, is to create an aura around Gennady."